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by highd
3099 days ago
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Investors that investigate companies, identify hidden problems and report on them to the public help enable more accurate price discovery. This wouldn't happen at all if they couldn't trade against it. For instance, I recall a story where a hedge fund sent PIs to determine that a factory reported running was actually closed down. They can't just trade against that info - it also has to be made public for them to realize gains. I can't imagine how you'd consider activity like this "getting away with it", when the alternative is companies performing unscrupulous acts in secret. |
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Or, in the first case, alleging that a company led to the death of an individual, when later the charge of murder was dropped.
It piqued my interest that in both cases, the meat of his allegations are at least highly ambiguous.
As someone whose job is not nearly as difficult as working with opioid addicts, it would be difficult to condemn such people without damning evidence.
That a person having respiratory issues might not be thought of as requiring hospitalization to me seems like something that could happen without negligence on the part of a rehab facility.
And the idea that rehab facilities are inherently motivated by greed when compared to cheaper outpatient programs based around prescriptions seems to infer malice when the obvious conclusion is that some people really believe that approach is superior. This claim is the type of thing that a competitor might believe but nobody else should.